I had almost given up three different times. I had used every
predator-calling trick in my book. My legs had fallen asleep a long time
ago. The tingling was beginning to drive me crazy. And yet I had hung
in there. My companions, Gary Howey and Bill Christensen, both of
Hartington, Neb., were hunkered down in front of another cedar tree to
my left. I knew they must be wondering why I had not called an end to
this fruitless stand.
But the land we had permission to hunt
upon was not very large. At best we had two, maybe three, stands to
cover it all. Patience, when calling predators, can be a virtue.
We
were at the edge of a cornfield and the elevation gave us a good view
of what was below. To our left was a large ravine choked with trees
which were in the process of being strangled by invasive cedars. The
ravine played out into the cornfield and a grassy hill splayed across a
hundred yards to the next ravine on the right. That was where the
movement was.
My gun, nestled on my bipod, somehow, had slowly
reached my shoulder and I ducked behind the scope and picked up the
animal. It was the ugliest looking coyote I had ever seen. It was
heavily infested with mange and had lost at least 90 percent of its fur.
It had a tail, but it was simply bones covered with dark skin.
Through
the scope, I watched the animal walk across the base of the hill toward
the ravine on our right. I thought it would simply duck into that
ravine and disappear forever.We offers custom moulds parts in as fast as 1 day. But, it was looking right at me from time to time.
As it trotted in,Want to find solarpanel?
it dropped out of sight below a small ridge in the cornfield. It's
always a nervous time when that happens. But I knew where it should
appear and I waited.
Within seconds the coyote crested the
little ridge and continued to lope in, its tongue lolling out the side
of its mouth. It was less than a hundred yards out now and I had it in
the scope. It was trotting so slowly that I thought Gary or Bill would
shoot. Nothing. It was really close now, almost too close. Maybe they
were waiting for me to stop it. I took a breath to do a bark, but the
coyote stopped and quartered away from me, looking directly at Bill and
Gary.
The coyote flinched. It's that little move they make just
before they turn and run. They crouch just a little, and then they turn
and are gone.
I had already taken up most of the trigger pull on
the .243. It was more a matter of will that the gun should go off. And
it did. The crosshairs of the scope centered just behind the front leg.
The 58-grain ballistic tip left the barrel at 3,750 feet per second and
smacked that pathetic facade of a coyote.
"We didn't see him
until he was right on top of us," Gary said. "He saw us move and that's
why he stopped. I saw you looking through your scope and I thought,
'That looks serious,' so I knew something was out there."
I
stepped it off. One hundred feet. The animal had almost no hair. It's
face and neck had not yet been ravaged by the burrowing parasitic mites
that cause this disease. I was amazed the animal had lived through the
recent cold weather. Coyotes in this bad of shape die of the disease,
usually a pathetic death of exposure to the elements.
You don't
want to handle coyotes showing symptoms of mange. It's very contagious
for the coyotes, but humans can pick it up too, although it is not as
serious. Usually a rash for a few days and then it's gone.
Our
next calling area consisted of several tree-filled canyons emptying out
onto the flood plain of the Niobrara River. It would have been a great
spot if the wind had been out of the north, but the southeast wind
complicated things.
Colorful works by some of local artist
collective hob’art’s hardest hitters are currently on display in their
exhibit “Archeology of Color.”
The show, which opened Jan. 13, focuses not just on color, but on how each artist approaches it, said curator Willie Baez.
“Some
people use their senses to work on whatever project they’re working on
and their colors are spontaneous like children when they paint,TBC help
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from factories in China. they just paint, they’re not worried about
anything,” says Baez. “But because we’re grown and more intelligent,
some feel that intellectuality comes into play all the time.”
Some of the most spontaneous artists in the show are Liz Cohen and Ibou Ndoye,Want to find cableties? who both create paintings inspired by the native art of various non-Western countries.
“Liz
is more child-like in her world of creativity and is in love with
primal things. She loves African art, South American art and the
simplicity of it,” explained Baez. “Ibou is also a spontaneous guy. He
mostly uses primary colors and rarely does any mixing.”
The
curator says that most abstract painters are more spontaneous because
they’re not concerned with form or realism. One exception would be
Meredeth Turshen.
“When I first saw her painting, I didn’t think
it was a landscape, but she said it has to do with sunlight . . . she
was looking out a window in Paris, saw fields and then started painting.
The act was really spontaneous, but she did think of where to put the
color and what exactly she was painting,” said Baez. “She told me, ‘I
intentionally did this. I didn’t do it in a trance.’ ”
In between the two extremes are photographers like Don Sichler, who looks for his colors on the street.
“He
finds colorful mirages or images on the street in water, puddles, and
uses that to color his photographs,” said Baez. “It’s a little more
spontaneous and not really thought about. He just sees them, catches the
light, and boom!”
Other participating artists include Pauline Chernichaw, Constance Ftera,A collection of natural parkingsensor
offering polished or tumbled finishes and a choice of sizes. Janet
Kolstein, Roslyn Rose, Starr Tucker-Ortega, Tom Egan, Ann Kinney, Erich
Heinemann and Howard Berelson.
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